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ARTERIOSCLEROSIS
AND HEART DISEASE |
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Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes,
and Metabolism, Atherosclerosis Research Laboratory, Tufts-New
England Medical Center, Boston, Mass 02111, USA.
CONTEXT: The scarcity of data addressing
the health effects of popular diets is an important public
health concern, especially since patients and physicians
are interested in using popular diets as individualized
eating strategies for disease prevention. OBJECTIVE: To
assess adherence rates and the effectiveness of 4 popular
diets (Atkins, Zone, Weight Watchers, and Ornish) for
weight loss and cardiac risk factor reduction. DESIGN,
SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A single-center randomized
trial at an academic medical center in Boston, Mass, of
overweight or obese (body mass index: mean, 35; range,
27-42) adults aged 22 to 72 years with known hypertension,
dyslipidemia, or fasting hyperglycemia. Participants were
enrolled starting July 18, 2000, and randomized to 4 popular
diet groups until January 24, 2002. INTERVENTION: A total
of 160 participants were randomly assigned to either Atkins
(carbohydrate restriction, n=40), Zone (macronutrient
balance, n=40), Weight Watchers (calorie restriction,
n=40), or Ornish (fat restriction, n=40) diet groups.
After 2 months of maximum effort, participants selected
their own levels of dietary adherence. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:
One-year changes in baseline weight and cardiac risk factors,
and self-selected dietary adherence rates per self-report.
RESULTS: Assuming no change from baseline for participants
who discontinued the study, mean (SD) weight loss at 1
year was 2.1 (4.8) kg for Atkins (21 [53%] of 40 participants
completed, P = .009), 3.2 (6.0) kg for Zone (26 [65%]
of 40 completed, P = .002), 3.0 (4.9) kg for Weight Watchers
(26 [65%] of 40 completed, P < .001), and 3.3 (7.3)
kg for Ornish (20 [50%] of 40 completed, P = .007). Greater
effects were observed in study completers. Each diet significantly
reduced the low-density lipoprotein/high-density lipoprotein
(HDL) cholesterol ratio by approximately 10% (all P<.05),
with no significant effects on blood pressure or glucose
at 1 year. Amount of weight loss was associated with self-reported
dietary adherence level (r = 0.60; P<.001) but not
with diet type (r = 0.07; P = .40). For each diet, decreasing
levels of total/HDL cholesterol, C-reactive protein, and
insulin were significantly associated with weight loss
(mean r = 0.36, 0.37, and 0.39, respectively) with no
significant difference between diets (P = .48, P = .57,
P = .31, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Each popular diet
modestly reduced body weight and several cardiac risk
factors at 1 year. Overall dietary adherence rates were
low, although increased adherence was associated with
greater weight loss and cardiac risk factor reductions
for each diet group.
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Department of Internal Medicine, Washington
University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Little is known regarding the long-term
effects of caloric restriction (CR) on the risk for atherosclerosis.
We evaluated the effect of CR on risk factors for atherosclerosis
in individuals who are restricting food intake to slow aging.
We studied 18 individuals who had been on CR for an average
of 6 years and 18 age-matched healthy individuals on typical
American diets. We measured serum lipids and lipoproteins,
fasting plasma glucose and insulin, blood pressure (BP),
high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (CRP), platelet-derived
growth factor AB (PDGF-AB), body composition, and carotid
artery intima-media thickness (IMT). The CR group were leaner
than the comparison group (body mass index, 19.6 +/- 1.9
vs. 25.9 +/- 3.2 kg/m(2); percent body fat, 8.7 +/- 7% vs.
24 +/- 8%). Serum total cholesterol (Tchol), low-density
lipoprotein cholesterol, ratio of Tchol to high-density
lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), triglycerides, fasting
glucose, fasting insulin, CRP, PDFG-AB, and systolic and
diastolic BP were all markedly lower, whereas HDL-C was
higher, in the CR than in the American diet group. Medical
records indicated that the CR group had serum lipid-lipoprotein
and BP levels in the usual range for individuals on typical
American diets, and similar to those of the comparison group,
before they began CR. Carotid artery IMT was approximately
40% less in the CR group than in the comparison group. Based
on a range of risk factors, it appears that long-term CR
has a powerful protective effect against atherosclerosis.
This interpretation is supported by the finding of a low
carotid artery IMT.
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University of Cincinnati and Children's
Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio 45221-0038,
USA.
Untested alternative weight loss
diets, such as very low carbohydrate diets, have unsubstantiated
efficacy and the potential to adversely affect cardiovascular
risk factors. Therefore, we designed a randomized, controlled
trial to determine the effects of a very low carbohydrate
diet on body composition and cardiovascular risk factors.
Subjects were randomized to 6 months of either an ad libitum
very low carbohydrate diet or a calorie-restricted diet
with 30% of the calories as fat. Anthropometric and metabolic
measures were assessed at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months.
Fifty-three healthy, obese female volunteers (mean body
mass index, 33.6 +/- 0.3 kg/m(2)) were randomized; 42
(79%) completed the trial. Women on both diets reduced
calorie consumption by comparable amounts at 3 and 6 months.
The very low carbohydrate diet group lost more weight
(8.5 +/- 1.0 vs. 3.9 +/- 1.0 kg; P < 0.001) and more body
fat (4.8 +/- 0.67 vs. 2.0 +/- 0.75 kg; P < 0.01) than
the low fat diet group. Mean levels of blood pressure,
lipids, fasting glucose, and insulin were within normal
ranges in both groups at baseline. Although all of these
parameters improved over the course of the study, there
were no differences observed between the two diet groups
at 3 or 6 months. beta- Hydroxybutyrate increased significantly
in the very low carbohydrate group at 3 months (P = 0.001).
Based on these data, a very low carbohydrate diet is more
effective than a low fat diet for short-term weight loss
and, over 6 months, is not associated with deleterious
effects on important cardiovascular risk factors in healthy
women.
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Department of Body Composition and
Metabolism, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Goteborg, Sweden.
OBJECTIVES: To compare two different
very low calorie diet (VLCD)-based weight maintenance strategies.
DESIGN AND SETTING: A randomized 2-year clinical trial performed
at the Department of Body Composition and Metabolism, Sahlgrenska
University Hospital, Sweden. SUBJECTS: A total of 334 patients,
body mass index (BMI) >30 kg m-2, aged 18-60 years. INTERVENTIONS:
All the patients started with 16 VLCD weeks. Subjects in
the intermittent group were then scheduled to use VLCD for
2 weeks every third month, whilst patients in the on-demand
group were instructed to use VLCD whenever their body weight
passed an individualized cut-off level. Irrespective of
the treatment group, all the subjects were recommended a
hypocaloric diet during VLCD-free periods. MAIN OUTCOME
MEASURES: Changes in body weight, body composition, anthropometric
variables and cardiovascular risk factors. RESULTS: Completers
in both groups maintained highly significant weight losses
after 2 years: 7.0 +/- 11.0 kg (6.2 +/- 9.5%) in the intermittent
group and 9.1 +/- 9.7 kg (7.7 +/- 8.1%) in the on-demand
group (P < 0.001, ns between groups). Male completers in
the on-demand group lost significantly more weight than
men in the intermittent group, 14.5 +/- 11.0 kg vs. 4.0
+/- 10.5 kg, respectively (P < 0.01). Most cardiovascular
risk factors improved during the first year, whilst anthropometric
measures, insulin, HDL- and LDL-cholesterol were also significantly
improved after 2 years of treatment. CONCLUSION: Clinically
significant weight reductions were achieved after 2 years
of VLCD-based treatment. The structure of VLCD treatment
during the maintenance phase did not affect weight loss
in the total study population, whilst male subjects might
benefit from the VLCD on-demand strategy.
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Laboratory Medicine, School of Medicine,
Fukuoka University, Japan.
To evaluate the effects of weight
reduction on the autonomic nervous system in obese patients,
we investigated heart rate variability (HRV) based on
24-hr ambulatory electrocardiogram (ECG) recordings before
and after weight reduction. To aim for weight reduction,
16 obese patients were treated with the very-low-calorie
conventional Japanese diet (VLCD-CJ) therapy combined
with behavior therapy. Percent weight reduction was 17.8%
+/- 1.5% (means +/- SEM), but mean blood pressure did
not change significantly after VLCD-CJ therapy. The mean
normal R-R interval (mNN) of the 24-hr ECG and all other
five time-domain indices increased after weight reduction.
Spectral analysis revealed that weight reduction increased
the high frequency (HF) component, but decreased the ratio
of low to high (LF/HF) components. Rate of change in mNN
or HF correlated positively with reduction rate of body
mass index, but not that in LF/HF. Analysis of daily fluctuations
in each HRV parameter showed that significant improvement
after weight loss occurred mainly during the nocturnal
period, but an HF component was improved throughout the
day and night periods. These findings indicate that functional
impairment of the autonomic nervous system in obese subjects,
particularly in the nocturnal period, is improved by effective
weight reduction after VLCD-CJ therapy.
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Division of Cardiology, University
of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, 78229-3900,
Texas, USA.
The life-prolonging effects of calorie
restriction (CR) may be due to reduced damage from cumulative
oxidative stress. Our goal was to determine the long-term
effects of moderate dietary CR on the myocardial response
to reperfusion after a single episode of sublethal ischemia.
Male Fisher 344 rats were fed either an ad libitum (AL)
or CR (40% less calories) diet. At age 12 mo the animals
were anaesthetized and subjected to thoracotomy and a 15-min
left-anterior descending coronary artery occlusion. The
hearts were reperfused for various periods. GSH and GSSG
levels, nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) DNA binding activity,
cytokine, and antioxidant enzyme _expression were assessed
in the ischemic zones. Sham-operated animals served as controls.
Compared with the AL diet, chronic CR limited oxidative
stress as seen by rapid recovery in GSH levels in previously
ischemic myocardium. CR reduced DNA binding activity of
NF-kappaB. The kappaB-responsive cytokines interleukin-1beta
and tumor necrosis factor-alpha were transiently expressed
in the CR group but persisted longer in the AL group. Furthermore,
_expression of manganese superoxide dismutase, a key antioxidant
enzyme, was significantly delayed in the AL group. Collectively
these data indicate that CR significantly attenuates myocardial
oxidative stress and the postischemic inflammatory response.
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Department of Medicine, Helsinki
University Hospital, Finland.
OBJECTIVE: The beneficial effects
of weight loss with a very-low-calorie diet (VLCD) on
cardiovascular risk factors have been reported at the
end of energy restriction. As the effects, especially
on blood pressure, may not remain constant during weight
maintenance, we studied the longer-term effects of weight
loss on 24h ambulatory blood pressure (ABP), lipids, glucose
and insulin. DESIGN: Prospective study of a 17-week weight
loss programme containing an eight-week VLCD period and
follow-up visit at one-year. SUBJECTS: Twenty-nine moderately
obese, normotensive or mildly hypertensive women. The
mean +/- s.d. body mass index (BMI) was 36.0 +/- 2.6 kg/m2
and mean age 40.3 +/- 8.3 y. RESULTS: In the last week
of the VLCD, the mean (s.d.) weight loss was 12.4 +/-
3.3 kg (P < 0.001), at the end of the programme 15.1 +/-
4.4 kg (P < 0.001 vs baseline), and at one-year follow-up
10.7 +/- 7.6 kg (P < 0.001 vs baseline). Mean 24 h ABP
decreased 8.0/4.6 mmHg (P < 0.001 for both) on the last
week of the VLCD, at the end of the programme, the systolic
ABP decrease was 4.7 mmHg (P < 0.01 vs baseline) and diastolic
2.1 mmHg (not statistically significant (NS) vs baseline).
At one-year follow-up, the mean systolic ABP decrease
was 4.1 mmHg (P < 0.01 vs baseline) and mean diastolic
3.0 mmHg (P < 0.05 vs baseline). Sodium excretion decreased
55 mmol/24 h in the last VLCD week (P < 0.01) and returned
to baseline after that. At the one-year follow-up, beneficial
changes, compared with baseline, were observed in mean
serum glucose (-0.28 mmol/l, P < 0.05), triglyceride (-0.35
mmol/l, P < 0.01) and HDL cholesterol (+0.16 mmol/l, P
< 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: This weight loss programme with
a VLCD enabled obese subjects to lose weight and decrease
cardiovascular risks. Despite some regain in weight during
follow-up, the beneficial effects were overall maintained
over the year. Sodium intake tended to increase during
follow-up. Information on sodium restriction should be
included in weight loss programmes.
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